Media in Africa 20 years on: Our Past, present and future
 
Written by Guy Berger | 07 October 11
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To assess the 1991 Windhoek Declaration in terms of African media history requires recognising that this seminal document came from the hearts of journalists. Generally around the world, but in Sub-Saharan Africa especially, journalism is bound up with idealism. This is notwithstanding the many persuasions and pressures that can lead its practitioners to fall short of the ideal. The desire to strive for the best applies to even the most constrained journalists, who - when they set aside any self-rationalisations - would invariably prefer to do the right thing journalistically. To this end, they hunger to be free of distorting controls by government officials, politician owners or unscrupulous bosses. This idealistic motivation includes even the most underpaid reporter on a private outlet who persistently supplements his or her erratic income with bribes. It is also something which supercedes most other senses of identity that an African journalist may have, at least in terms of aspirations. It is central to the appeal of being a true journalist who works as a professional to serve the noble cause of circulating information in the public interest. It is this idealism that underpins the power of the Windhoek Declaration.

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More information about this resource:
 
PublisherMISA
Year of publication2011
OnlineYes
Physical ResourceYes
Physical LocationGMDC Library
Place of PublicationWindhoek, Namobia
Classification No070.4 BER
Section NameBooks
 
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